Get Free Checker
[ UK /ɡɹˈiːnbæk/ ]
[ US /ˈɡɹinˌbæk/ ]
NOUN
  1. a piece of paper money (especially one issued by a central bank)
    he peeled off five one-thousand-zloty notes

How To Use greenback In A Sentence

  • February 25, 1862 and later, Congress had provided for the issue of four hundred and fifty million dollars of United States paper notes, which were commonly known as greenbacks or legal-tenders. The United States Since the Civil War
  • There were some loose bills in his vest pocket -- greenbacks.
  • The renminbi has been stable against the greenback ever since.
  • Estimated price is somewhere between 200-250 thousand greenbacks.
  • Center Nick Greenbacker will be the man in the middle with Liam Potter gone. Northeast Conference
  • If current trends continue unabated, Moyo goes much further than the usual surveys predicting when China will surpass the US in GDP - she suggests China's new hegemony could include the "redback" renminbi replacing the "greenback" dollar as the world's favourite currency. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
  • ‘We have obligations to our shareholders,’ says Helicar - as if a pile of greenbacks is worth more than someone's father, mother, sister, brother or child.
  • Not satisfied with having built the first American locomotive and running for president (for the Greenback Party ticket), industrialist Peter Cooper decided to try his hand in desserts. Alex Santoso: The 10 Neatest New York Inventions Ever
  • Thomas A. Hendricks, a Greenbacker, was offered by The New Nation
  • It was on account of the chairman's abracadabra that we were all rolling around drunk with wealth, tossing greenbacks in the air in nouveau riche ecstasy.
View all